"A game of chess played on your feet, requiring agility, power
and intelligence."

That's how coach Henry Harutunian describes fencing. It's a
sport that provides strength of character for one's entire life.
For 40 years, Yale fencers with the will have been counting on
Harutunian to hone the skill.

Harutunian has produced numerous All-Americans and an NCAA men's
foil and women's sabre champion during his tenure. Remarkably, a
number of those honored had never touched a weapon before coming to
Yale. The men captured the NCAA sabre title in 1994 and the NCAA
foil title in 1992. The women, meanwhile, have won three national
titles (1982, 1984, 1985).

Harutunian, the 1996-97 USFCA Coach of the Year, had a
distinguished career as a fencer and coach in his native Armenia.
He was named eminent coach of the Republic of Armenia in 1963,
while serving on the coaching staff for the Soviet national team
from 1962-1966.

One of his pupils made the U.S.S.R. Olympic team in 1956 and
went on to become the first Soviet to claim the individual epee
title at the Junior World Championships in 1958. Harutunian came to
the United States in 1966 and coached at Brandeis for three years
prior to joining the Yale staff.

Before long, Harutunian had joined the U.S. coaching elite. He
began working with the American national team in 1977, and in 1984,
he served as one of three U.S. Olympic coaches. He also coached the
Americans in the 1979 and 1983 Pan American Games and in the 1979,
1981, 1983, 1991 and 1993 World University Games.

Harutunian was named Coach of the Year by the National
Intercollegiate Women's Fencing Association in 1982 and by the IWFA
in 1984 and 1985 at the NCAA Championships. In 1986, the U.S. Men's
Fencing Coaches Association selected him Coach of the Year.

He has also choreographed stage fencing for both theater and the
screen, and has acted in films. Harutunian's philosophy of fencing
is guided by the following passage from The Works of Moliere: "The
eyes which watch and warn, the brain which evaluates and decides,
the hand which executes the decision must harmonize precision and
speed to give real life to the sword."